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All drug stores, Diamond-Dyes Highest Quality for 50 Years his one whose hea and priceless collection | This crucifix | Marie Antoinette al moment of her ex of wood and | ready lurge which he wis carried by up to the and Is PORRCKECH, most ecution made brass, After the had made her | confession, an hour or so before her | execution, she handed the simple lit- tle crucifix to the priest . . , almost her last earthly act. Some time later the the crucifix to his | niece, lived In Toulouse, As dying | cure to gOMe keepsake. He « Marie crucifix, Later he 1 and it was he queen priest eave gave By ELMO SCOTT WATSON Pale tapers glimmer in the sky, The dead and dying leaves go by; Dimly across the faded green Strange shadows, stranger shades, are ; - : . { Seen-—— a sv Bh Fi EAE 4 : / = A - [ a It Is the mystic Halloween, ; § / 1 J who she select | the | ohlect ns lay she asked little An became hose oinetie’s Rico LTHOUGH this writer is no seventh of a seventh Cah ” ? ; : ; ee, SR fi \ } Aalih 1” No son and therefore poOssess- : hin ; s ae % WM Mig Qk A A iat its ing “second sight” and the | SESE ) A 0 oe, ay ab 21 A \ kg isn't gift of prophecy, he feels : perfectly safe in making a prediction. It is this: On the night of October 31 there will unusual activity among the juvenile population of the United States of America, Par- ties of them will gather in houses in which the decorative scheme will in- clude grinning jack-o’-lanterns, dry and yellowed stalks of corn, black witches et cetera. But the principal activity will be outdoors rather than indoors. In the «ties and towns white-sheeted figures will roam the streets, and other figures, lacking any special costume, will flit furtively among the shadows in alleys and back streets. In the country the roads and lanes will see more night traffic than usual and dogs will bark at shadowy holl- son one seems to value yout! worth, e 1it 1 very good, Millions in Vegetables One hun dred thousand freight cars | were required to move the that were shippe iit of p of California Iast Vere. | the | state This i | represents a valuation of £75,000,000, | | tables year. be ; and the crop was BH) per cent more | | than It was five years ago ! Sir WALTER RALEIGH has i California is not only conceded to testored the good repute of many | be the able a pipe. Give that unpopular briar | Such on, of yours a thorough cleaning. Fill and ma it with Sir Walter's smoking mix- | 5, when the ture. Before you've finished thefirst Yeqel HE =v: ak can, you'll find yourself witha | of reformed pipe—a pipe that will have aes; £0 ct admiring glances from your | ie friends. Sir Walter is a distinctive first stite In ve; pro- . but outstanding cats, . practice il rketing ence vepels i duction late DOs, were n growing, pa New Medicine Cabinet Bottle FEEN-A-MINT voiue HO¢ intruders in farm yards. The next morning merchants in city and town will find the front of their stores decorated scrawling lines of white—soap put there, but not to clean the panes. Gates will be missing from their customed places, benches and chairs will have disappeared, water will be gushing forth from unguarded taps and in general there will such a transposition of any object left out- doors by the careless householder as to cause one to wonder by what strange magic have hitherto-inanimate things come to life. Farmers, finding wheels missing from their hung, perhaps, high up in a tree, or even, perhaps, discovering the wagon itself perched astride the ridgepole of the district school—will mutter the same thing that the merchant is mut- tering under his breath—"The little heathens!” They shouldn't eall that, however. “Pagans” rather than “heathens.” For October 81 is Halloween and on that night young America is a throw-back to their pagan ancestry of thousands of years ago. For the boys and girls who go about on Halloween playing pranks on their elders, even though probably not one out of a hundred knows It, are simply keeping alive a custom born in England in the far-off days of the Druids—with this difference: their ancestors of ancient observed this custom to keep away or propitiate evil spirits, whereas their descendants assume the characters of evil spirits, windows with long ac- he wagons— the children is the word, days or at least, mischievous ones, and act accordingly. ‘he origin of Halloween goes back #to the respect and homage paid by an- client nations to the sun. The pagans of those days, whether Egyptian, Greek or Roman, assigned a place of great importance in their pantheon to the sun god, the giver of light and heat and life. The sun marked out for them the time of work and the time of rest; it divided the year into sea- sons ; it made possible hounteous crops of grain and fruits and under its warming rays flourished all that was beautiful and splendid and wonderful on this earth, So it was only natural that the early pagan should set aside a day of grief for the ending of summer when his beauty and splendor declined under the frosts and winds of the coming winter, when the earth fell under the spell of the evil powers and was not to be free from them again until the coming of spring. But mingled with this grief over the passing of summer was the joy which he felt ag he be- held the golden harvest of the autumn and in his heart he felt a song of thanksgiving for the ripened grain and fruit. The deity to whom the Romans were accustomed to render their thanks for these gifts was the god- dess, Pomona, and they were accus- tomed to set apart October 31 or No- vember 1 In her honor as a festival day in which nuts and apples, repre senting the winter store of fruits, fig- ured prominently. The Celts, the original inhabitants of the British Isles, worshiped the spirits of the forests and streams, Thelr priests, the Druids, held their rites beneath the great oaks which are characteristic of that land, since this tree was held In speclal veneration by the Celts, The Druids in time became skilled prophets In Interpreting the will of the gods. They kept thelr sacred lore from the people and hand- ed It down only among themselves, They taught that souls were Immortal and that they passed from one body to another when life became extinet. On October 31 the Druids taught that the Lord of Death gathered to gether the souls of all those who had died during the year just passed and assigned to them bodies of the ani mals they were to inhabit the coming twelvemonth, according to their con- demnation, . Samhain, “summer's end,” was No sember 1 to the Druids. Flocks were brought in: people rested from labo fires were built to Baal giving for the brought harvest in abundan were fires of tha which Altars season's close lighted, and after on Octobe dwelling were and ti were Rept the hroned, burni a year—until return of Samb Fire biessed the household. From this custom, and that of bur ing a delving into the future. In sheep's struggles were read the morrow Evil spirits that came out of Samhain in Ireland lived for the rest of the year in Cruchan Cave in Connaught, called the "hell-gate of On this yearly the cave was opened and evil spirits in the form of birds” came They preyed on families, stealing babies from their cribs, leav- ing in thelr places goblins and hideous changelings. These evil spirits had the reputation of being very cunning and the peasantry, in order to get rid of them, and around their evil visitations, performed various and sundry acts of propitintion. They boiled egg shells in the sight of the changelings, treat ed ill the children left them and did other weird and strange things, The Celts placed great store In tests. Samhain was the great time for these, Individuals were blindfolded that they might be the better guided by fate. In the practice of these supersti- tions the Celts were not alone. They were universal over Europe In the ages previous to the Christian era. Christianity and the Roman emperors put them to rout. Augustus forbade his subjects to be Initiated into the Druidicial worship when he occupied Britain. Tiberius drove the priestly cult from Gaul and Emperor Claudios stamped out their belief. The Romans pursued the Drulds ruthlessly to the Island of Mona, near Wales, where they esterminated them at one fell blow and destroyed their oaks. Christianity in time succeeded the Druidieial worship. Onto the old re- ligion and old festivals were grafted new names and new customs. The midsummer festival was dedicated to St. John: Lugunsad gave way to Lam- mas. The berries of the mountain ash or rowan tree, which had been food for Tuatha, “the people of the goddess Danu,” now served to exorcise the very spirits In whose honor they at one time had been eaten, All Hallows, or All Saints’ Day, on the church calendar, was assigned to November 1. In the beginning it was celebrated in May, the month in which Pope Boniface 1V, In 610, consecrated sheep, the practice of Arose date “copper-colored out. the Roman Pantheon to the Virgin and all the saints and martyrs of church. The latter day Pope Gregory IV in 835 the assignment wns made by } ¥ that the crowds whic in order up each year te Het he fod xuMiolent is ght he fed sufficien came y Rome for the religious ROFYIOOR IT from the bountiful 1 the "1 141 vests of the year. In “ century November made All Souls’ Da) Since America is the meltis the nat that this « ers, partakes of the customs a radi Hence our Hal of Irish, German ons it ily natural like so nn tions of low eon + Wil nati English, Scotch not to mention find tradi tions, contributions frota the Prench, Dutch, Spanish, Por Austrian, Italian and as Nordic tuguese, states as v The original celebrati country nn though of harvest: and provis i But despite this one could find and then old Halloween in full There follov " such games as apple ducking Now 1 foree and ap 2 the comb and and throwing shoulder, peel over mirror tests ~ ballads topped off by a round of ghost stories, their iurch A party of twelve may learn future If one from an « yard a cod of earth and set tw candles in it, naming them as he them. The ure of governed by the light the candle emits, will get elve ie lights cach i= wavering, steady, sputtering or going out, Fairies come in for especial atten tion in Ireland. Good and bad they hold Irish heart in their power, and, go the story runs, St. Patrick was not immune to thelr wiles, One lulled him to sleep before Samhain. These spirits dwell In grassy mounds and In streams and on the eve of All Saints’ Day troop forth to work their will on countryside. To this day one may hear authentic accounts of the ap pearance of fairies in Ireland and the necessity of doing certain things in order to hold their good will Scottish Halloween traditions seem to be more clearly defined and more purposeful than the Irish ones. There is a lightness in Irish character that is not to he found In the Scottish, and for this reason the Scots take more seriously the traditions in regard to witches, evil spirits and fairies, all of whom they believe to be abroad on Halloween, The Scotch Invented the idea of “Samhainach,” a goblin who comes out just at “Samhain.” It is he who In Ire land steals children. The fairies pass at crossroads, and in the Highlands whoever took a three-legged stool to where three cross-roads met, and set upon it at midnight, would hear the names of those who would die in a year. He might bring with him arti cles of dress, and as each name was pronounced throw one garment to the fairies. They would be so pleased by this gift that they would repeal the sentence of death, 40, 1930, Western Newspaper Union.) the matter what price you pay- Got His on Earth ira ¢ Dancing Taught by Squares +7 fey § gE 8 Pine for Pulpwood Er x fire's f « creams. 31 Burns = Forest 1 fe sarnple and sales intent female 3¢ Time Out Mrs Hardy Grain A hybrid grain, a cr ye ai the great sisting qu pees of wheat is about treble wheat It distribution nex { cine. i | | DILLARD'S ASPERGUM The Right and Dasy Way - to take Aspirin Velue L0¢ Totel Value € B¢ Feen-a-mint is America’s most Popular Laxative. Pl nt, safe, dependable, pon-habit forming. Keep it handy in his attractive economical bottle. 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